Mesivta Ohr Torah Lakewood v. Township of Lakewood

24 N.J. Tax 314
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedDecember 10, 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 24 N.J. Tax 314 (Mesivta Ohr Torah Lakewood v. Township of Lakewood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mesivta Ohr Torah Lakewood v. Township of Lakewood, 24 N.J. Tax 314 (N.J. Super. Ct. 2008).

Opinion

DeALMEIDA, J.T.C.

This opinion follows the trial of the above-referenced matters challenging judgments of the Ocean County Board of Taxation denying tax exempt status for tax year 2007 to two residences claimed to be parsonages for plaintiffs officiating clergymen. For the reasons explained more fully below, judgments reversing the county board decisions and granting an exemption to both properties will be entered by the Tax Court Clerk.

I. Findings of Fact

These matters concern two single-family houses in Lakewood Township, Ocean County. The property designated as block 417, lot 1, is located at 74 Birch Street. The property designated as [322]*322block 117, lot 8, is located at 215 Fifth Street. Plaintiff, a religious organization, owns both houses and applied for an exemption from local property taxation for tax year 2007 for the properties, asserting that on October 1, 2006 the homes were the parsonages of officiating Rabbis at plaintiffs nearby synagogue. The Lakewood Township tax assessor (the “assessor”) denied the exemptions. While the assessor does not dispute that the Rabbis live in the homes, she determined that plaintiff does not operate a synagogue or serve an active congregation, as is required for a parsonage exemption. She instead decided that plaintiff operates a yeshiva, or religious school, at which religious services are periodically held. Because a parsonage exemption applies only to the homes of clergymen who officiate for active religious congregations at houses of worship, the assessor denied the exemptions. The Ocean County Board of Taxation affirmed the assessor’s decisions. Timely appeals were thereafter filed with this court.

A trial was held in this matter on May 19, 2008. The court took testimony from Jonathan Reiehenberg, an officer of plaintiff and a member of its congregation, Rabbi Yacov Josef Rotenberg, who plaintiff presented as an officiating clergyman at its synagogue, Christine Lappas, a field inspector for the Lakewood Township assessor, and Linda Solakian, the assessor. Having had the opportunity to observe the demeanor of each witness, the court finds that all testimony was provided in a candid fashion with no apparent evasion and all of the witnesses were credible. Numerous documents and photographs were admitted into evidence. Based on the testimony introduced at trial and the exhibits entered into evidence, the court makes the following findings of fact.

Plaintiff Mesivta Ohr Torah of Lakewood, Inc. (hereinafter “Mesivta Ohr Torah”) is a not-for-profit corporation organized on or about March 1, 1996 for religious, charitable and educational purposes pursuant N.J.S.A. 15A:2-8 and section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. According to plaintiffs bylaws, the purpose of Mesivta Ohr Torah is “to establish and conduct a house of worship for members of the Jewish faith in the Orthodox Jewish tradition, to promote Jewish awareness and for charitable pur[323]*323poses such as the following: the advancement of education, the advancement of religion.... ” In addition to the two properties described above, Mesivta Ohr Torah owns property at 41 Henry Street in Lakewood Township. The property at 41 Henry Street (the “Henry Street property”), on which two buildings and ancillary structures are located, has been treated as a tax exempt school pursuant to N.J.S.A. 54:4-3.6 since 1995. It was not until September 28, 2006, a few days before the operative valuation date of October 1, 2006, that plaintiff applied for an exemption on the Henry Street property as both a school and a house of worship. The Henry Street property remained exempt as a school for tax year 2007.

Mesivta Ohr Torah operates an elementary school for boys at the Henry Street property. One of the two buildings at the Henry Street property is dedicated entirely to school purposes. A portion of the bottom floor of the second building, which is two-stories in height, is also dedicated to school purposes. Plaintiff contends that in addition to serving school purposes, the second building houses a synagogue, or shul, on its second floor supported by an active congregation known as Congregation Sharei Slomo (“Sharei Slomo”). The municipality contends that both buildings are used for school purposes and that plaintiff does not maintain a house of worship on the property.

The synagogue area is approximately 1,150 square feet in size and contains an Ark, a wooden structure that houses the scrolls of the Torah. The purchase of the Ark was a considerable investment by plaintiff. Tables and chairs are arranged in front of the Ark for purposes of worship during religious services. Also in the room are separate lecterns for use by various officiants. A wall with windows encloses a separate area in which women worship during services. The synagogue is never used for school purposes, but instead for prayers, religious services, religious study, and lectures. Services are held in the facility three times a day, seven days a week, three hundred and sixty-five days a year. A separate entrance on the outside of the building leads to the synagogue, which has bathroom facilities independent from those that serve the school. Utilities are metered separately for the [324]*324school and synagogue. A sign at the synagogue entrance indicates that students from the school are not permitted in the synagogue. During her testimony, a field inspector employed by the municipality who had inspected the property a few days after plaintiffs application for an exemption candidly stated, “[w]hen I went out to the property there’s two buildings, and one building was a school and upstairs was a synagogue.”

Mikvas, ceremonial baths associated with religious rites, occupy four rooms on a different floor of the facility. The Mikva area includes two bathrooms and dressing rooms devoted solely to those using the ritual baths, which must be maintained according to the standards established in religious law. One of the baths is used by male members of the faith pursuant to religious custom ancillary to religious worship. Female members of the congregation use the other Mikva periodically under strictly private conditions pursuant to religious law. The congregation charges a nominal fee for use of the Mikvas, which are open both to members of the congregation and members of the public who belong to the Jewish faith.

As of October 1, 2006, Sharei Slomo consisted of approximately fifty-four members who paid annual dues. An additional forty-nine members made periodic donations to the congregation. Exhibits entered into evidence reflect “membership” income to the synagogue of $19,000 for 2005 and $21,500 for 2006. “Contributions” to the congregation amounted to $27,100 for 2005 and $32,900 for 2006. During discovery plaintiff declined to provide to defendant a list of the members of Sharei Slomo, citing privacy and First Amendment concerns. At trial, the court discussed with the parties the possibility of plaintiff submitting a list of members of the congregation to the court for in camera review. The parties did not pursue that option and the record contains only the testimony of plaintiffs two witnesses as detailed above regarding congregation membership.

Although a document purporting to represent two pages from a Lakewood Township Jewish community phone book which listed Sharei Slomo as a public synagogue was not admitted into evi[325]

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